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    not fall inside the scope of the current laws. Peaceful displays of civil disobedience are courses of actions that can have

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    Civil disobedience has a positive effect on a free society. It allows people to display their rights or beliefs without hurting others. A peaceful protest gets someone’s point across mush more effectively than a violent protest. In a violent protest people point to the protestors and easily take away credibility from the people protesting. The protestors look unintelligent as they resort to violence. The resorting to violence can show that people don’t know how to express their opinions in an intelligent

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    Civil Disobedience is an insightful peaceful and in many cases more effective than simple violence at addressing ills in society. If one wishes to partake in civil disobedience they must follow three rules or steps‚ one they must identify an ill in society usually involving governmental oppression. second they need to break said laws or or rules they see ill. And thirdly and possibly most important they must accept all punishment without retaliation or resistance. Another major factor in civil disobedience

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    Rights. Laws were enacted by representatives‚ and those laws are the foundation for all societal interactions between a free people‚ including all civil rights‚ and business rights. Given these freedoms‚ and the genius of a government that was predicated on human rights‚ human freedom and in particular‚ and governed

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    Civil Disobedience: An Act Which Citizens have the Moral Obligation to Complete Laws are created in order to protect and keep the common good in society. However‚ what if a person finds a law unjust; should they obey the law anyways or should they ignore it because they feel it goes against the common good? If a law is unjust‚ the people in that society should have the moral obligation to disobey the law. Of course‚ there are limitations as what is deemed unjust. A person cannot go against the law

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    I negate that civil disobedience‚ or “the refusal to obey certain laws‚ demands‚ or commands of a government‚ or of an occupying international power”‚ according to the dictionary‚ should be permissible. The rule of law provides the necessary structure for maintaining justice. Civil Disobedience is not permissible for three reasons: It sabotages democratic process‚ is self-defeating‚ and although a part of history‚ that does not make it morally just. Civil Disobedience is not permissible because it

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    Katelyn Mehner Period 3A 9-27-15 Civil Disobedience Truly DisobedienceCivil disobedience is a form of protest in which protesters deliberately violate a law” (suber). It is a way for society to reform itself to reflect its current values while maintaining its fundamental ideals. Some may argue civil disobedience is a “slippery slope” leading to anarchy or it cannot be justified in a democracy. Civil disobedience‚ while not optimum‚ is a way to accomplish change with the intent of reform

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    the British occupation in the 1919 Revolution.[3] Civil disobedience is one of the many ways people have rebelled against what they deem to be unfair laws. It has been used in many nonviolent resistance movements in India (Gandhi’s campaigns for independence from the British Empire)‚ in Czechoslovakia’s Velvet Revolution and in East Germany to oust their communist governments‚[4] In South Africa in the fight against apartheid‚ in the American Civil Rights Movement‚ in the Singing Revolution to bring

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    Civil disobedience is the act of breaking the law as a form of peaceful protest. Some think that it might be ineffective because it takes long or too many people can get hurt‚ but if you include violence you can make the problem worse and could lose a lot more lives and get more people hurt. I think civil disobedience is an effective way to make change in society. Some ways that civil disobedience is effective is that can fight a bigger power‚ you can bring attention to the issue without violence

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    The ‘Right’ of Civil Disobedience I. Introduction Civil disobedience refers to a politically motivated breach of law designed either to contribute directly to a change of a law or of a public policy‚ or to express one’s protest against‚ and dissociation from‚ a law or public policy. Examples include the American Civil Rights Movement‚ and the fight against South African apartheid. There has been much academic discussion regarding the ‘right’ of civil disobedience and its justifications

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